You are sitting in your car after the interview, replaying every moment. The interviewer smiled. They said "we will be in touch." They asked about your start date. That has to mean something.
You open Google and type "signs I got the job." You are looking for certainty. Everyone does.
Here is the problem: a Resume Genius survey found 75% of hiring managers admit to lying to candidates. The warmth you felt may have been training, not signal. Not every sign is a lie. But enough of them are that reading tea leaves is less reliable than you think.
Which signals actually matter (a reliability tier list)
Not all signs are equal. Most articles list 15-30 signals as if they all carry the same weight. They do not.
Hard signals (these mean something)
They check your references. They discuss salary or benefits unprompted. They give a specific next step with a date: "You will hear from us by Thursday." They ask about competing offers or your timeline. These are actions, not words. Actions require effort. Effort means intent.
Strong signals (encouraging, not conclusive)
They introduce you to team members who were not on the original schedule. Their language shifts from "if" to "when": "when you start" instead of "if we were to offer." The interview runs significantly over time and the conversation deepens, not just small talk filling the clock.
Noise (means almost nothing)
"We will be in touch." "You are a strong candidate." Smiling, nodding, leaning in. "Great talking with you." They seemed friendly and engaged.
The noise category is where most candidates get hurt. A friendly interviewer is not a signal. It is a personality trait. Or a company policy.
What they say vs what they actually mean
Six phrases candidates obsess over, decoded.
"We will be in touch"
CNBC called it the biggest lie HR managers tell. It is a polite exit line, not a promise. If they want you, they give specifics: a date, a next step, a name.
"We have a few more candidates to interview"
You are not the frontrunner. You could still get it, but you are in a stack being compared.
"We will keep your resume on file"
They will not. This is a soft close. Move on.
"You are overqualified"
Usually means too expensive, too likely to leave quickly, or the hiring manager felt threatened. Rarely literal.
"We went in a different direction"
Deliberately vague for legal protection. Could mean anything from "we hired internally" to "the role was canceled."
"We will be making a decision soon"
Could be days. Could be weeks. Means they have not decided, which is actually neutral, not negative.
The pattern: vague language is never a good sign. Specific language ("You will hear from Sarah by Friday") is the only verbal signal worth trusting.
Why great interviews still end in rejection
The interview felt amazing. Rapport was great. The interviewer laughed at your joke. You got a tour of the office. Then: silence.
This happens because warmth is policy. Interviewers are trained to make every candidate feel comfortable regardless of their decision. The friendliness was real. The hiring intent was not.
Here is the counterintuitive part: tough questions are a better sign than easy ones. When the interviewer challenges you, pushes back, asks for specifics, they are testing depth. They are investing time in evaluating you because you are worth evaluating. When they go easy and keep it surface-level, they may have already decided and are running out the clock.
A nurse who had a warm, laughing conversation about patient care and did not get a callback. An engineer whose "great culture fit" interview ended in a form rejection. A teacher who was told "we loved your demo lesson" and never heard back.
The friendliness was real. The signal was not. If the rejection stings, that is normal. But blaming yourself for misreading warmth as intent is blaming yourself for something the interviewer manufactured.
What to do instead of reading signals
Send one follow-up email within 24 hours. Reference something specific from the conversation, not a generic thank-you. Then stop.
Check your inbox twice a day. Morning and evening. Every check beyond that is anxiety performing as productivity.
The timeline data: the average hiring process takes 44-68 days. One week of silence is normal. Two weeks is still possible for senior roles. Three weeks with no response to your follow-up means they likely moved on, though they may not tell you.
Keep applying. The biggest mistake is pausing your entire search because one interview "felt close." Until you have a signed offer, you are still searching.
Channel the signal-reading energy into preparation for the next interview. That is the one signal you fully control.
The interviewer decided in the first 10 minutes. The signals after that were confirmation of a decision already made. You cannot reverse a decision by reading their body language afterward. You can influence it by being undeniably prepared for those first 10 minutes.
The candidate who spends the waiting period practicing walks into the next interview sharper than the one who spent two weeks decoding "we will be in touch." If you want to control the signal instead of reading it, try a free practice session and hear how your first 10 minutes actually sound to the person deciding.